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The Small Business Jobs Act of 2010 (H.R. 5297) as enacted on September 27, 2010

The Small Business Jobs Act of 2010 (H.R. 5297) as enacted on September 27, 2010. TITLE III – State Small Business Credit Initiative (SSBCI). Component of Small Business Jobs Act that uses state government delivery

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The Small Business Jobs Act of 2010 (H.R. 5297) as enacted on September 27, 2010

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  1. The Small Business Jobs Act of 2010(H.R. 5297)as enacted onSeptember 27, 2010

  2. TITLE III – State Small Business Credit Initiative (SSBCI) • Component of Small Business Jobs Act that uses state government delivery • $1.5 billion to states to support state-run small business capital access programs or other credit support programs

  3. Georgia’s allocation amount is $47,808,507. States must use federal funds for programs that partner with private lenders to extend access to credit for small businesses. States are required to demonstrate a minimum “bang for the buck” of $10 in new private lending for every $1 in federal funding. SSBCI Treasury Guidelines

  4. Georgia SSBCI Programs Georgia offers three SSBCI programs within a performance-driven approach: • GCAP (Georgia Capital Access Program) • SBCG (Small Business Credit Guarantee) • Georgia Funding for Community Development Financial Institutions (CDFIs)

  5. GCAP (Georgia Capital Access Program) – Scope & Purpose • New lending program for the state of Georgia • GCAP provides portfolio insurance to lenders by requiring insurance premiums to be paid, by the borrower and lender, into a loan loss reserve fund for each loan enrolled. State will match the contribution to the reserve fund. • Eligible lenders include banks, credit unions, and CDFIs, as defined by SSBCI act.

  6. GCAP (cont.) • Each financial institution has a separate loan loss reserve fund managed by GCAP. • GCAP will use SSBCI funds to contribute an amount equal to the sum of the contributions paid by borrower and lender for enrolled loan. • Several other states are using SSBCI funds to expand pre-existing CAP programs (CA, NC, MI, etc.).

  7. Small Business Credit Guarantee (SBCG) – Scope & Purpose • The Georgia Small Business Credit Guarantee (“SBCG”) Program will provide a 50% loan guarantee with a conversion option. • SSBCI funds will be leveraged with private capital from community development financial institutions, credit unions, banks, and qualified private investors.

  8. Georgia Small Business Credit Guarantee Program • The conversion option under the loan guarantee enables financial institutions to build a Risk Reserve Pool (RRP) held by the State in a centralized fund. • Eligible financial institutions will sign a Program Participation agreement. • Enrolled loans are covered with a 50% loan guarantee. • Financial institutions will pay a 2% initial loan guarantee fee and ½ of 1% loan guarantee fee each subsequent year the guarantee remains in place.

  9. Georgia Small Business Credit Guarantee Program • Financial institutions will be incentivized to leverage private lending at 10:1 through the conversion option. • Financial institutions decide when to convert their 50% loan guarantee to the RRP. • 10% of the balance on a converted loan will be moved to the RRP. • Under the RRP, the lender may receive up to 80% reimbursement for losses on individual credits. • Reserves can cover losses on any enrolled loans. • DCA will partner with the Georgia Department of Banking and Finance to ensure participating financial institutions are financially sound.

  10. GA Funding for Community Development Financial Institutions (CDFIs) • CDFIs are private financial institutions certified by the U.S. Treasury to provide credit and financial services to underserved markets and populations. • There are approximately 20 different CDFIs in Georgia created by a combination of private for-profits (banks and developers) and special purpose non-profit corporations (e.g. ACE and Habitat for Humanity).

  11. Community Development Financial Institutions (CDFIs) • CDFIs are already established in the market niches or underserved communities that must be addressed in the SSBCI application. • CDFIs provide alternative funding sources to small businesses for a portion of their working capital and fixed asset financing needs. • CDFIs will provide the gap financing (“but for”) to assist small businesses with obtaining the financing they need.

  12. Community Development Financial Institutions (CDFIs) • CDFIs will be reviewed for financial and management capacity, loan history, and legal structure. • Approved CDFIs will earn fees for underwriting, closing, and servicing SSBCI loans, and may participate in one of two capacities: • Loan originator/servicer – DCA forwards SSBCI funds directly to borrower. • Contracting entity – DCA forwards funds to CDFI, which may retain and revolve funds into future SSBCI projects, subject to State SSBCI regulations and approval by US Treasury.

  13. Community Development Financial Institutions (CDFIs) • Funding under SSBCI to CDFIs will be structured under Treasury guidelines using a performance-driven approach. • SSBCI must be used by CDFIs to fund projects that leverage new private investment. • State will monitor CDFIs through performance-based contracts.

  14. Contact Information Brian Williamson Assistant Commissioner for Community and Economic Development Georgia Department of Community Affairs (404) 679-1587 brian.williamson@dca.ga.gov

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